Showing posts with label Sovereign National Conference. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sovereign National Conference. Show all posts

Saturday, March 07, 2020

The 4TH REPUBLIC: Constitution Review: That Nigerians Would Not Be Taken For A Ride Again






This underlying mala fide has been the main reason restructuring Nigeria, desirable and imperative as it is, has become a taboo for some people.

Two very distinguished Nigerians, former President Olusegun Obasanjo and the Most Revd Matthew Hassan Kukah, Bishop of the Sokoto Diocese of the Catholic church, have of recent been talking to us, their Nigerian compatriots, just as the Catholic Bishops conference of Nigeria, (CBCN) has been at it, calling the Buhari government’s attention to its shortcomings as well as always encouraging the government unto good deeds.

As recently captured by the inimitable essayist, Emeritus Professor Olatunji Dare, Bishop Kukah’s elegy was “comprehensive in its sweep, magisterial in its scope and delicately balanced between hard thinking and strong feeling”. President Obasanjo’s speech, described elsewhere as his purgatory, being a denounciation of his long held belief in the inviolability of Nigeria as presently structured, is the one that really concerns us here.

Like President Umar Yar Adua denouncing the election that swept him into office in 2007, Obasanjo in his latest outing -not a letter this time around – acknowledged that the 1999 constitution on which he was sworn in that year, and subsequently for his 2nd term, is not working nor will it ever work. More tellingly, he opined that “nothing short of a new order (constitution), based on a restructured polity, can take Nigeria out of its present predicament”.

But have our National Assembly members, among them many former state governors, come to this realisation?

Of course, not.

Do they require robotic science to know that what Nigeria needs today is far beyond the perfunctory review of an old, jaded and totally inappropriate constitution, which was conceived by the professor who wrote its final draft for the goggled general, as nothing more than a tool to cast hegemonic intentions in stone. This underlying mala fide has been the main reason restructuring Nigeria, desirable and imperative as it is, has become a taboo for some people.

In case the National Assembly cannot comprehend this, let it be said, loud and clear, that what Nigeria needs now is for President Muhammadu Buhari to urgently set up a Constitution Drafting Committee of experts, whose report would be approved by Nigerians at a national referendum.

Unfortunately, from what we have come to know very well, even if the legislators are aware of this minimum desideratum for peace to reign in Nigeria, precedents already set by the National Assembly are too attractive, and tempting for them not to embark on another constitution review which is guaranteed to be another futile exercise.

Given the need to be on our guide and open our eyes very well, as they commence this round of review, I wish to bring to the attention of all Nigerians the unflattering report of the investigation conducted by the PREMIUM TIMES, and published 11, December 2015, on an earlier constitution review exercise.

In addition to warning us against the National Assembly’s predilection to turn every constitution review to a cash cow, the report should also alert the now rejuvenated EFCC, which recently demonstrated courage in commencing investigation into the N35B defense money believed to have been looted over a decade ago, to bring the legislators allegedly implicated in those shady deals under its purview . For those implicated that should serve to enable them clear their names for posterity, lest they go down in infamy.

But more crucially, and of greater benefit to Nigeria, the President would be giving, not only his name, but his place in history, a major lift if, rather than permit another sterile constitution review exercise, he would urgently convoke a Constitution Drafting Committee to fashion out for the country, a proper constitution which will not lie against itself, claiming to have been made “by we the people”.

It is therefore being suggested, as already opined by former President Obasanjo and many other eminent Nigerians, that it will be a sheer waste of time, and resources, to merely look on whilst the National Assembly continues with this chimera of a constitution review.

For full disclosure, the Senate President, Ahmad Lawal had, on February 6, 2020, set up a 56- member committee for this purpose with all the principal officers as members in addition to one senator from each state, and two others, selected to represent each geo-political zone.

Welcome then to the Prime Times report.

How lawmakers pocketed N8b in failed Constitution amendment

In an investigation lasting months, this newspaper found that between 2011 and 2015, the 53-member House of Representatives Ad-hoc Constitution Review Committee and its 49-member counterpart in the Senate in the 7th National Assembly withdrew N3,250,000,000.00 and N4,500,000,000.00 respectively to purportedly execute the fourth alteration of the Constitution.

It is not immediately clear how the lawmakers spent the outrageous funds but insiders say a huge chunk of it was pocketed by members of the committees in what one source described as ‘unprecedented naira bazaar’, by a committee of the National Assembly’.

Officials of the committees continued to make withdrawal even long after the exercise was concluded. It remains unclear what those withdrawals were spent on.

The Committees, which operated independently, withdrew the monies in tranches from their accounts domiciled in an Abuja branch of the Guarantee Trust Bank.

Curiously, some of the withdrawals were made long after they submitted their final reports to both chambers for consideration and a few weeks before the general elections and the inauguration of the 8th National Assembly.

The Committee withdrew N83.33m on March 2, 2015 and the same amount on March 23, five days before the Presidential and National Assembly elections and on April 13, barely two days after this year’s governorship election.” – PREMIUM TIMES, December 11, 2015.

The House Committee’s major activities during the process included a retreat in Port Harcourt, Rivers State, between May 27 and 29, 2012; Peoples Public Sessions held simultaneously in all the 360 federal constituencies on November 10, 2012; and public presentation of collated results on April 18, 2013.

It held 25 meetings altogether while the assignment lasted. There was also a retreat for the Technical Experts on Constitution and Legal matters who produced the work-plan as well as some civil society organisations drawn from the six geo-political zones. Members of the House subsequently voted on the various sections proposed for amendment on January 30, 2014.

The Senate Committee, on the other hand, held a retreat in Asaba, Delta State; organised zonal and national (Abuja) public hearings; conducted opinion polls; undertook study tour to the United States, Canada and India; held consultations with seasoned experts and constitutional lawyers; and organised town hall meetings in the senatorial zones. It presented its final report to the Senate on June 5, 2013.

The Committee whose membership included the principal officers of the upper chamber who served as “members of the steering committee,” finally organised a retreat in Lagos to consider a draft bill. That was after the senators voted on the amended sections on three occasions – July 2013, April 2014 and June 2014.

But those who should know say all these engagements could not have cost the nation more than N1billion altogether. They said some of the public sessions held in states were funded by state governments.

Authorities wouldn’t comment on withdrawals

The then Senate President, David Mark, could not be reached for comment. He did not answer or return multiple calls. Neither did he respond to a text message sent to him.

So also was Mr. Ekweremadu, who spearheaded most of the spending.

When contacted, Imam Imam, the media aide to the former Speaker of the House of Representatives, Aminu Tambuwal, asked this newspaper to direct all inquiries on the last constitution amendment to the Clerk of the House of Representatives, Sani Omolori.

Mr. Ihedioha, who chaired the House Ad-hoc Committee, also requested us to do the same.

“My dear, feel free to reach out to the Clerk of the House of Reps to furnish you with all details you will need,” the former deputy speaker said in a text message to one of our reporters.

Mr. Omolori could however not be reached as did not answer or return calls. He did not also respond to a text message sent to him. Several attempts by this newspapers to also speak with the Clerk to the National Assembly, Salisu Maikasuwa, failed.

The Director of Information of the National Assembly, Ishaku Dibal, told PREMIUM TIMES he was not in a position to speak on the matter. Also, the former spokesperson of the House, Zakari Mohammed, who served in the ad-hoc committee, did not answer calls by this newspaper.

But a former senator who served in the Senate ad-hoc committee, Anthony Adeniyi, said he was not certain about how much committee members spent on the constitutional amendment.

“I can’t confirm the figure you are quoting. I don’t think we spent that much,” he told PREMIUM TIMES in a telephone interview Thursday.

But another senator close to the constitution review committee, who requested not to be named for fear he might be attacked by his colleagues, said, “I can confirm that they withdrew more than that. Committee members were just sharing money”. That, Nigerians, was how N8 Billion got burnt.

Nigerians must be vigilant, this time around.



Sunday, December 15, 2019

How A Fabricated Nation-State And Its Junta Understands Democracy



 Queen Elizabeth in Nigeria: Olubunmi Jibowu bows and looks at the camera as she presents a bouquet to the Queen during her visit to Nigeria to inaugurate the Federal Court in Lagos. Image: Hulton-Deutsch Collection/CORBIS/Getty, February 1956.



The Queen supervised the transition process for sovereignty from colonial administration to independence, undertaken by the constitutional conferences. Nigeria would gain her independence on October 1, 1960, on a Parliamentary set up, which paved way for the Prime Minister to run the affairs of state on party platform based on majority rule. What was projected to lead the continent in its political process and the sound human capital to her credit, would be overwhelmed by widespread scandals of bribery and corruption, coupled by internal strife, and a loophole that gave the military every reason to usurp power in an array of power play within the juntas for nearly 30 years.

Meanwhile, the Pogrom of the Igbo would erupt upon assassination of Aguiyi Ironsi, in what had begun the junta, leading to the Biafran War and the 'Economic Blockade' orchestrated by Obafemi Awolowo, which desperately starved Biafran women and children to death in which the international community worried that an ethnic group was being wiped out, called for help to arrest the situation from around which British Prime Minister Harold Wilson and his genocidal allies had agreed it was justified for its position to be firm on Nigeria, even if it has to cost millions of lives..

In its take, following how the world had reacted to the Pogrom, Senator Edward Kennedy, in dinner with Nobel Laureate, Rene Cassin, at the International League for the Right of Man, at the New York Hilton Hotel, December 6, 1968, called for massive assistance to the desperately starved Biafran women and children urging President Lyndon Johnson to name a special representative to supervise the Biafran tragedy. Johnson did nothing.

Richard Nixon's White House did, and had been made known and, the worry had begun to show when the National Security Adviser, Henry Kissinger, sent an urgent memorandum to President Richard Nixon dated January 28, 1969, acknowledging an ongoing genocide, thus, demanding swift measures to save the children of Biafra. Kissinger writes;

"There are no exact numbers on the scale of the human tragedy gathering in Biafra. But all our sources do agree that more than a million people are likely to be in danger of starvation... There would be no question about evacuating the 5500 U.S. citizens or sacrificing the $300 million private investment on the Federal side if these stood in the way of relief. The heart of our dilemma, however, is that our instinctive moral concern and involvement with this tragedy cannot be separated from the political tangle."

 The junta continues with its dictatorship upon armistice and end to the Biafran War with promises of transition to civilian rule which is often delayed while another junta stages a coup and refreshes its mandate with assurances a legitimate process would conduct free and fair elections and reinstate a democratic fabric to the republic.
 A 2nd Republic is established, short-lived, and the junta wrestles power from the subdued civilians, again. A trend follows, and the "Army Arrangement" continued apace, from the lot of the Muhammadu Buhari  murderous junta, to the Ibrahim Babaginda criminal mafia operations, and subsequently, the Sani Abacha death squad and reign of terror, in its final play, the ordinary civilian was brain dead, and would be confused, and would not know what democracy had meant, learning nothing at all from its first stage as the colonists left it, and thus begun the 4th Republic and a nation still run by the junta in continuity.

In what was widely thought to be a nation's coup culture, the "soldier go, soldier come," and business as usual kind of thing, on affairs of state run by the military, as its citizens never bothered, even though a population had been immuned, and all the bad stuff and bullying by the juntas that came along with it, getting used to pain, from constant whooping and ultimate hijack of the peoples mandate, which dealt the civilian structure a big blow.

Regardless of the "bloody civilian" slogan by a half-baked, bad military trained nihilists and hoodlums, which left an ugly mark on the civilian order, there were no qualms in dealing with the situation, and a population that had succumbed to dictatorship and, a lasting wound on the ordinary citizen that would be permanently disfigured, and a sustained military existence, henceforth.

But a noted few had resisted tyranny and the unreasonable nature of the juntas by way of their expression in music, art, writings, and other forms of activism, in which nothing could convince them a dance or dialogue with the military brass was a normal affair. The stages of the junta had been a nightmare, subduing the private citizen, who had been perpetually battered and silenced, losing all of its sanity and having no choice but being insane to adopt and applaud a military dictatorship with its high profile personnel part of governance that destroyed all aspects of civil liberties.

All the civilian personnel engaged in the Yakubu Gowon junta to the Abdulsalami Abubakar military regime, so-called transition to democracy, were all part of the conspiracy, finding it comfortable, working with the junta. In some cases, a resistance and challenge to the junta had ominous consequences drawn from the Olusegun Obasanjo panicking junta that closed down Chris Okolie's New Breed Magazine for stories the junta had thought threatened the military machines and a procedure not accepted in totalitarian regimes. Obasanjo's predecessor, Murtala Mohammed, however, was more brutal in his executions of military power. The drug addled, reckless tyrant, who all of a sudden, became a national hero, mercilessly dealt with the civilian structure in its administrative order, and sacked civil servants from public office with "immediate effect" on no prior notice. A spooky event, and funny enough, he was applauded and seen as the nation's champion for reform..

The military and the civilian structure are two different institutions with each assigned its specific roles. The military has no business in the affairs of state. But in Nigeria and elsewhere on the African continent, the junta and brigade of arms bumps into the people and wrestle power from them, in collaboration with their pick of civilians they have cowed into obeying the last orders and accept what is offered them without resistance. They are then set up as stooges, collecting fat checks from bogus accounts, fabricating manpower, embezzling money meant for infrastructure, bellyful but won't hesitate or complain, or decline to any requests to be part of draconian laws against the people, rather they find themselves enjoyably good, while the junta keeps up with decrees that silences the people in every aspect of life. They have become stationery puppets and would do anything the junta had asked to implement as the "bloody civilians" becomes their tool for any operation that spells anarchy and policed in the kind of the gestapo.

The draconian laws never changes or modified in consideration to the plight of a subdued population, battered beyond recognition to have lost every sense of purpose in basic human rights, the ultimate of free press in a democratic fabric and respecting the rule of law. That was never in existence; the junta had turned a sovereign nation into a banana republic. and controlled from the barrels of the gun. Shoot at sight was the method of operation in what they had seen as threat in their continued rule with brutality and underground killings.

Such was the situation of presumably a nation known for its enormous human capital and abundant natural resources, and in high expectations to be productive with its materials and operate effectively. It had been a case of sad reality. Nothing had worked with the junta running the affairs of state while citizens were treated like animals, ordered around like a zombie, and so disturbing no one knew when the nightmare would end to pave way for a sound democratic fabric, as in all organized societies, even when the juntas had promised over and over again, to end military rule and hand over power to civilians. It had been a coup culture, and each junta that wrestles power promises not to keep power for long until overthrown by another set of junta that keeps the same rules with added damning decrees, the draconian laws that prohibits free movement of people and total abuse of human rights.

As it would happen, we were driving, and poking around town in Lagos, on Sunday, October 19, 1986, on a fun-filled seeking evening to end a rusty week, the junta handling of state, and months of uncertainties getting used to the nations coup culture, while the DJs at the Federal Radio Corporation of Nigeria, the FRCN, were at work spinning the tracks from albums that were the smash hits of the day, when the news break was brought in announcing the fatal killing of Newswatch founding member, Dele Giwa.

"Unbelievable, and it could not be true," I'd say, "because, I had talked to Austen Oghuma earlier in the day and no such thing popped up in our discussion," as we drove along the streets for hang outs, while the 1980s sensational theme vibrated from the airwaves. Oghuma was the staff writer, news reporter and researcher for Newswatch Magazine, and we always had met on Sundays for talks over lager at his Alagbon Towers residence in Ikoyi, and sometimes on a more engaging evening at the Ikoyi Hotel, on discussions about junta proclaimed Babaginda's "democratic regime," when the junta had made it known he was a democrat, a term the foreign press had adored, even when the declared "evil genius" had been on a murdering spree of its citizens, especially silencing the press, institutionalizing corruption and destroying every aspect of civil liberties.

Following the radio announcement and a prime time event of the brutal assassination of Dele Giwa, with a sophisticated letter bomb at his Ikeja residence, about a year and some fractions the junta Babangida had overthrown the Buhari-led junta on inexplicable events, Babaginda had blamed his predecessors of all kinds of problems that had worsened situations in the country, especially, on press freedom and free movement of peoples, and on Buhari's sidekick in the regime, with more authority, Tunde Idiagbon, who was then Chief of Staff, Supreme Headquarters, of the junta, he had blamed for using the arms of the military regime as his own personal tool when arguments had heated up between the rank and file, and leaders of the authoritarian government, and the kingpin responsible for the state's criminal mafia.

Babangida who had self acclaimed himself a democrat, had carried out underground killings of his military opponents and adversaries who disagreed with his dictatorship. He had gotten away with all kinds of offenses against the state including institutionalizing corruption. He was the "evil genius." He was the nation's "Niccolo Machiavelli." He was the "Maradona" of Nigerian politics, a nick name given to him by the Nigerian press for wizard dribbling of his friends and foe. He was the "Don" of every crime in the land using his military power to legitimize it. He conquered the soul of the gullible and vulnerable civilian population with the impetus to deal with his subjects summarily without resistance. He had locked up journalists without bringing charges before them. He had ransacked the offices of the National Security Organization, the NSO, removing his personal files for any implications to his brutal rule and killings, and drug trafficking, and other related abnormal behavior to human nature.

He dissolved the NSO upon that; making sure there were no tracks of any trace, and created his own watchdog and, death squad, with divisions, the State Security Service, SSS, to monitor every event with the civilian puppets he had appointed to discharge duties on his orders. He created fictitious and uncountable bank accounts with conduits that channeled stolen funds to foreign banks in which none could be traced and eventually lost, and attested by Obasanjo, urging Nigerians to prove where the funds can be located for prosecution of the "evil genius,"

 He was everything bad in description. Not even a clue of who had murdered Giwa. All in all, he was free of charge and had the desire to run the country again in civilian outfit just like his former boss, Olusegun Obasanjo, had done in a cycle that would surface the present agbada wearing former junta, Buhari, and rerun of his murderous years, and clamp on the press.

Despite all the damages and havoc caused by the military, they remain in power, in its quasi-democracy, recreating itself of the past in typical military fashion which tells how stupid and confused Nigerians were when they gave Buhari their vote after the former junta's four attempts to fulfill his goal and agenda of what had been unfolding since he felt accomplished, and a second time around to deal with his subjects by reinstating dictatorship. To add more insult to dishonor, a blindfolded Nigerians reelected him, and now the same set of clowns, of a banana republic, are complaining of misrule by the former junta whose purpose was to complete his agenda and validate Islamic republic.

But it's quite clear, the overwhelming issue of a conquered population has been that of fear; the fear to pull the bull by the horn and take a radical step, taking back what belongs to them, giving its legislature ultimatum to cease and desist, effective immediately, a fabricated document put together by the juntas, and create its own document on a pattern that conforms to its standard as in all organized societies and effective democracies.

Buhari is now a nightmare. He resurrected himself. He declined to listen, and going by no rules that spells democracy. He has done it before, in army uniform, which gave him all the power he needed to make draconian laws, backpedaled, and execute them, on those targeted as warning shots to a "bloody civilian" structure.

Nigeria ain't seen nothing yet!



References;

1). Dinner Conference, International League for the Right of Man, New York Hilton Hotel; Associated Press, December 6, 1968

2). White House Memorandum to President Richard Nixon, January, 28, 1969

3). "IBB Where is the SSS File" by Austen Oghuma, 2010



Sunday, August 04, 2019

To Restore Peace, Government Must Implement 2014 Confab Report – Ndigbo


President General of Igbo socio-cultural organisation, Ohanaeze Ndigbo, Chief John Nnia Nwodo. Image via The Guardian

‘Attending Peace Meeting With Miyetti Allah, An Insult’



ENUGU (THE GUARDIAN)
-- In the wake of the recent peace parley organised at the instance of former Head of State, Gen. Abdulsalami Abubakar, leaders of Ndigbo have asked Nigerians to prevail on the Federal Government to implement resolutions of the 2014 national conference as a way of restoring peace in the country.

Their reason: No sort of peace meeting by any individual or group could usher peace into the country than an implementation of the outcomes of the 2014 confab, which, according to them, was reached by representatives of various ethnic nations and stakeholders that own the country.

The leaders explained that their absence at the peace meeting called on Monday by Abubakar was premised on the perception that lumping ethnic groupings in a meeting with the Miyetti Allah Cattle Breeders Association was an insult.

The apex Igbo socio-cultural organisation, Ohanaeze Ndigbo stated that the former head of state was wrong in calling a meeting of ethnic groupings in Nigeria with leaders of the Miyetti Allah, a trade organisation, representing cattle dealers.

The Deputy National Publicity Secretary of Ohanaeze, Chuks Ibegbu said: “Ohanaeze Ndigbo, PANDEF, Afenifere and Middle Belt Forum absented themselves because they were lumped together with Miyetti Allah and killer herdsmen.”

He further said: “We are not against Gen. Abubakar’s move to end the insecurity in Nigeria but things should be done properly. Apex socio-cultural groups in the country should not be expected to be on the same pedestal with an association of Cattle breeders. Miyetti Allah should have a roundtable with fishers, farmers, goat breeders, poultry farmers and artisans who are in same category with them.”

Ibegbu stated that Ohanaeze Ndigbo and other major groups in the country have continued to promote peace, unity and justice, among other ideals that could move the country forward. He explained that various ethnic groups, which presented their positions for a better Nigeria, attended the national confab of 2014.

“Those things have not been implemented and we feel that anyone interested in the peace and security of the country should look at the resolutions reached and pressure the government to implement them.”

In the same vein, former secretary of Ohanaeze Ndigbo, Dr Joe Nworgu, wondered how the resolutions of the meeting by Gen Abdulsalam could be implemented, when it did not have support of the government.

He stated that the decision taken by ethnic groups to boycott the meeting was the best thing to do, “otherwise, the organisers would have succeeded in telling the world that there was nothing left in the ethnic groups.”

He added: “What can we lose, what locus does the meeting have? How can he (Abdulsalam) call a trade group for cow owners to come and have meeting with Afenifere, PANDEF, Ohanaeze, and the Middle Belt Forum? It is an insult to have even thought of it.

“My advice is that he should re-invite the four groups because these people (Miyetti Allah) are already represented by the Arewa Forum and northern elders forum. Miyetti Allah is a recent invention,” he said.

Nworgu, who was a member of the 2014 national conference, insisted that there was no better way of resolving lingering issues in the country than taking another view at the resolutions of that conference, which he said represented the views of Nigerians.

The President emeritus of Aka Ikenga, Chief Goddy Uwazuruike, who dismissed the meeting as a further denigration of the ethnic groups in the country, stated that its motive was revealed by the comments attributed to one of the Media aides to President Buhari.

“I do not think that the meeting set out to achieve any peace or security than to further mock the ethnic regions that make up the country. Ndigbo and other Nigerians have always met and resolved issues plaguing the country. The problem is that those at the leadership seem to have resolved to look away from the issues. Ndigbo are interested in peace and development of the nation and will like anything that could foster it. Doing so does not mean that it should stoop so low to accept anything in the name of peace talk,” he said.

For the National President of Civil Liberties Organisation (CLO), Ibuchukwu Ezike, Abdulsalami, being one of the country’s leaders, need not call a meeting of ethnic nationalities to call the federal government to action over security challenges.

He said that government’s apparent lack of interest in security has now made most regions resolving to oversee security issues by themselves.

Saturday, September 15, 2018

The Drums Of Restructuring

Nigeria Vice President Yemi Osinbajo. Image via This Day




THIS DAY NEWSPAPERS


“Restructuring” is all the rage. It has become all things to all segments and a political battering ram in an election season. Unfortunately, very much like Richard Nixon’s campaign catchphrase, “Law and Order”, referred to jocularly in the press as Laura Norder during the American presidential election in 1968, in some areas it has inadvertently acquired a sinister undertone. In 1968, “Law and Order” on the surface sounded innocuous. Who could possibly be against the imposition of “law” and “order” unless of course you are anarchist? Nevertheless, many believed that Nixon was talking in code. Decoded, it actually stood for – “keeping the African – Americans firmly in their place.” Things like this have to be handled with care, analytical rigour and sensitivity.

In a campaign season in which ill-prepared candidates have sadly not presented a coherent alternative perspective on social and economic reconstruction, a nebulous “restructuring” unsurprisingly, has replaced clinical analysis of the key issues. Former vice-president Atiku Abubakar has seized on the buzzword with glee. Glaringly obvious is the former VP’s problem in explaining why he did not seek action on an issue he is now so passionate about earlier in his long political career.

Until his present reboot for another presidential run, Atiku has certainly not been associated with any deep thinking on the issue of the structure of the Nigerian state. In looking for a cause to use as a campaign theme, he makes a faux pas in taking on the current Vice-President Professor Yemi Osinbajo who in words and in deed has a proven track-record on this issue. What is intended to be Atiku’s knock-out punch is the mistaken belief by Atiku that Osinbajo has taken an opportunistic maneuver, a u-turn conveniently because he is now in government. This flies in the face of available evidence much of it verifiable in court decisions. As Attorney- General of Lagos State from 1999-2007, Osinbajo was fortuitously thrust into the heat of a series of legal battles and jurisprudential jousts over the issue of the rights of the federating units and the necessity to operate a real federal structure in Nigeria.

The irony of history here is pronounced. At the time the Lagos State Attorney – General was jousting in the courts on states’ rights, the sitting vice-president, surprise, surprise, was Atiku Abubakar. On the contrary, there is no available evidence of dissent from the sitting vice-president on these issues. On most of the defining issues, only the states of the Niger Delta sided with Lagos. It is on record that Osinbajo as Attorney General of Lagos State went to court to ascertain the fact that every state should control, to a certain extent, its own resources. This eventually led to the landmark ruling that the oil-producing states should continue to get 13% derivation.

In Attorney General of Abia State & 2 Ors v Attorney General of the Federation and 33 Ors, VP Osinbajo (as Attorney General of Lagos State) challenged the constitutionality of the Local Government Revenue Monitoring Act in the Supreme Court contending that it is a major negation of true federalism. As third plaintiff in the case, Lagos State filed the most comprehensive objections to the act. Osinbajo had argued that the National Assembly could not exercise oversight functions over local government administration in the country.

The act which provided for direct disbursement of local government allocations from the federal account and monitoring of the process by the federal government, amounted to undue interference with the powers of the states over local governments as provided by Section 7 (and other sections) of the 1999 Constitution. He argued too that it was also unconstitutional for the National Assembly to impose a duty on the state as – the act sought to do -, in matters within the legislative competence of the state legislature. The other 33 states supported the arguments. The Supreme Court agreed with his position and ruled in favour of Lagos State. This case has been pivotal to maintaining the powers of states over local governments till in line with the principles of true federalism till today.

In Attorney General of Lagos State v Attorney General of the Federation & 35 Ors (Urban Planning case), he challenged the provisions of the Urban Planning Decree which had been passed by the military and adopted by the PDP government of President Olusegun Obasanjo (with Atiku as VP). The law had purported to confer powers of urban and regional planning for the whole country on the federal government. Based on the decree, the federal government was issuing building plan approvals to people in Lagos State and other parts of the country, in complete disregard of the physical planning laws and arrangements of the states.

The facts are incontrovertible that vice-president Osinbajo has had a distinguished track record of fighting for true federalist cause. What he should not be stampeded into doing is to jump into a vacuous bandwagon using the buzzword ‘restructuring’ to obscure the decisive realities that the Nigerian federation faces. Apart from devolution of authority to the states and the local governments, the critical issue is not a nebulous, ill-defined ‘restructuring’, but a programme of social and economic reconstruction of the glaring inequalities in our country.

Much of the sources of conflicts can be traced to social inequalities and the limitations of opportunities. With the advent of the preposterously termed Structural Adjustment Programme in 1985, Nigeria has largely had what the Latin American economist Andre Gunder Frank described as ‘growth without development’. Ephemeral ‘growth’ figures have not translated into the realities of higher living standards and a fight back against the underlying causes of structured poverty. Cyclical commodities boom have come and gone without policies which have been of benefit to the majority and not to just a privileged view. In contradistinction, the government of Ignacio Lula da Silva in Brazil took 40 million people out of poverty in eight years through the sort of social intervention programmes which vice-president Osinbajo is associated with.

As the vice-president himself in response to Atiku has pointed out, “Good governance involves, inter alia, transparency and prudence in public finance. It involves social justice, investing in the poor, and jobs for young people; which explains our school feeding programme, providing a meal a day to over nine million public school children in 25 states as of today. Our NPower is now employing 500,000 graduates; our TraderMoni that will be giving microcredit to two million petty traders; our Conditional Cash Transfers giving monthly grants to over 400,000 of the poorest in Nigeria. The plan is to cover a million households.”

There are a myriad of other social intervention programmes such as free school meals and the anchor borrowing programme for farmers which are a demonstrable attempt to convert millions of subsistence farmers into commercial farmers.

The Italian political philosopher Antonio Gramsci decades ago very astutely pointed out that the central ethos of politics is to shift the territory of debate decisively in favour of one’s own position. For the first time in decades, the territory of the discourse is being shifted to focus on government policies that will benefit the majority. It is early days and there will be hitches and hiccups. Nevertheless, what is shaping up as a decisive break from a dismal past should be supported. What will not be helpful to the prospects of the hitherto neglected majority are attempts by the beneficiaries of underserved and unsustainable privileges to obscure attempts at building a more inclusive, socially just society and lessening inequalities by hiding behind the smokescreen of ill-defined buzzwords and catch-phrases. The central issue of our time is widening social injustice. Personally, I am glad that at least there is now a re-direction of policies to face it.

Saturday, March 24, 2018

Jonathan To Buhari: Revisit 2014 Confab Report To End Agitations, Killings







YENAGOA (THE NATION) -- Former President Goodluck Jonathan on Saturday urged President Muhammadu Buhari to revisit the 2014 national conference report.

He said the report of the conference remained the solution to myriads of agitations, protests, killings, provocations and clamour for reforms in the country.

Jonathan spoke at a Mega Rally tagged: “Restructuring the Nigerian Federation,” organised by leaders of Pan Niger Delta Elders Forum (PANDEF), Ohanaeze Ndigbo, Afenifere and Middle Belt Forum under the aegis of Mass Alliance for Inclusive Nigeria (MAIN) Front.

The former President insisted at the rally which was held at the Ox- Bow Lake Pavilion, Yenagoa, Bayelsa State capital, that the implementation of the confab report was the only way out for Nigeria.

Jonathan, whose address was read by Senator Nimi Barigha Amange, said: “Nigerians had to dialogue in order to avoid the opposite action which could bring about destruction to lives and property and the very thing that holds us together as members of the Nigeria federation.”

The ex- President said he took the decision to convene the confab as a response to the yearnings of Nigerians for reforms to make the Nigeria federation work.

He added: “In convening the national conference, I had my mind trained on establishing a polity that would work for our people and further unite our country. I mean the system that would close the gaps along tribal, ethnic and religious lines.

“Until Nigeria comes up with an acceptable way of running the country, there is every likelihood that our nation would continue to witness agitations and protests from groups and ethnic nationalities that believe rightly or wrongly that they have been handed the short end of the stick.

“The goal of the 500 member conference made up of young and old; diverse people from all walks of life as true representative of different interest group in our country was thoroughly and fully discussed and agreed on every issue that has for long agitated the minds of Nigerians on how best to run the federation.

“This they did to the best of their abilities and to the satisfaction of most stakeholders as decisions were uniquely reached by consensus. Recent agitations, clamour and proffer of solutions have not radically departed from those findings.”

Tuesday, July 11, 2017

N’Delta Leaders Meet, Call For Implementation Of 2014 Confab Report

Maintain region not part of Biafra
 Abdulsalami, Kukah caution political elite against divisive statements
Iyobosa Uwugiaren in Abuja and Emmanuel Addeh in Yenagoa







YENAGOA, BAYELSA, NIGERIA (THIS DAY)
-- Leaders and elders of the Niger Delta under the Pan-Niger Delta Forum (PANDEF) have reiterated their demand for the implementation of the 2014 National Conference report and the relocation of the headquarters of oil multinationals to the region.

The national leader of PANDEF, Chief Edwin Clark, who presided over a meeting of the group Tuesday in Yenagoa, Bayelsa State, also called on the federal government to urgently revisit the 16-point agenda of the forum, as the patience of the youths of the region had started running out.

The nonagenarian spoke at the third general assembly of PANDEF with the theme, “Appraisal of the 16-Point Agenda: State of the Nation and the Way Forward for Sustainable Peace and Development in the Niger Delta region.”
The elder statesman, in the course of the meeting attended by several other Niger Delta leaders, including Governor Seriake Dickson and the King of Twon-Brass, Alfred Diette-Spiff, said the over 600 recommendations in the report would tackle the challenges facing the country.

He also asked the federal government to raise a team to commence dialogue with PANDEF to ensure the sustainability of peace in the Niger Delta region, where he maintained that crude oil production had increased significantly.

PANDEF also accused the federal government of failing to prevail on the oil companies to relocate to their operational bases, as well as not being forthright in declaring its position on the setting up of modular refineries in the region.
On the current Biafra agitation, the leaders reaffirmed their position that the six states of the South-south zone were not part of Biafra as claimed by some Biafran agitators.
They equally condemned the quit notice issued by the Arewa youths to the Igbos, describing the action as a flagrant violation of the Nigerian Constitution.

In his comments, Dickson assured the elders and leaders that the South-south governors were committed to working with them to promote and protect the interests of the region.
Dickson maintained that peace and stability were paramount in the development of the Niger Delta, stressing that the leaders in the region would work collectively to change the long perceived notion of insecurity in the region and promote its socio-economic and political viability.

He reminded the federal government that the militarisation of the Niger Delta was not a solution to resolving the issues, noting that the only battle to be fought was lack of economic inclusion and environmental terrorism in the region.
“There are parts of this country that are very happy to promote crises and spread propaganda about insecurity in our region as a deliberate strategy of weakening this region economically.

“So I want to use this opportunity to charge all our people, political, opinion and community leaders, to continue to work for a stable and prosperous Niger Delta because in the end, whether we are able to bring prosperity and development to our people depends on the presence of security and stability.
“I want to also use this opportunity to make the point again that militarisation of any community within any state in our region is not a solution.

“And in this Niger Delta, the battles to be fought are not the ones that tanks and soldiers should be deployed; the battles all of us should unite to confront and defeat in the Niger Delta, are the issues of environmental terrorism as I have always called it and the issue of gross neglect, under-development and lack of economic inclusion,” Dickson said.
He also aligned with the position of PANDEF, pledging to support the forum to ensure that its secretariat in Yenagoa functions optimally.

In a related development, a former military Head of State, General Abdulsalami Abubakar, and the convener of the National Peace Committee, Bishop Hassan Matthew Kukah, have strongly condemned the political elite who they said were promoting hate speeches and calling for the dissolution of the country.
They also commended Acting President Yemi Osinbajo for taking proactive steps to stem the growing divisive rhetoric and separatist sentiments in the country.

The National Peace Committee played a crucial role in the run up to the 2015 general election and used its influence to ensure that the key contestants in the polls and their supporters did not resort to violence during and after the elections.
The two eminent personalities who said this in a statement they jointly signed Tuesday in Abuja, noted that the developments were of serious concern to the peace committee.

They commended Osinbajo for engaging with leaders of influence across the North and South-east, in a bid to stop the rise of mutual hostility and tension that had been stoked by elements from some parts of the country.
Abdulsalami and Kukah called for more voices of leadership from all communities in the country to reinforce the message of the acting president.

“We’ve recently come to the end of the holy month of Ramadan, for millions of Nigerians, a time of spirituality, introspection and the request for God’s forgiveness,” they added.
“Therefore, there could be no better time than now as a nation for us all to be thoughtful, deliberate and make ourselves worthy of divine mercy, especially in the atmosphere of a steep rise in divisive and hateful rhetoric in our country.
“It is indeed, the appropriate time to underscore the imperatives of peaceful co-existence of all communities and all Nigerians,” they said.

They observed that Nigerians could not afford at this time or any other time to stoke the fires of hate and divisiveness in the body politic, especially when ordinary Nigerians are engaged in difficult struggles to secure their livelihood, amidst rising insecurity and increasing fear.
They added that the nation had lost too many of its citizens to random and diverse acts of violence, while many more had been maimed for life or living in displacement.

They further stated: “Tens of thousands of children have been orphaned by conflict and millions of our fellow citizens now face threats of starvation in the face of rising food insecurity.”
In many parts of the country, the committee noted that mass killings had gone unpunished and unresolved, inter-communal clashes had become chronic, adding that economic deprivation and growing social exclusion and feelings of alienation, particularly among the youths were being exploited by segments of the elite with potentially dangerous and painful consequences for all Nigerians.

The statement acknowledged that the drums of rising division also reflects the perception by citizens that there is poor governance in Nigeria today, blaming politicians who had failed in delivering on the mandate of the electorate for better livelihoods and neighbourhoods for teaming up with advocates of division and hate.

The group stated that in many parts of the country, young people who had been left without means of livelihood or hope in their future had become converts to radicalisation preached by those it described as demagogues who resorted to various guises including ethnicity and religion.
According to Abubakar and Kukah, “At this time in Nigeria, more than ever before, we need government at all levels, which works for the people, with commitment and respect for the rule of law and for the security and well wellbeing of persons and communities in the country.

“We also need credible institutions, an economy that guarantees a fair deal and outcome for hardworking people, better physical infrastructure and an enabling environment in which citizens can thrive.”
They further urged the state governments to be more committed to developing their people and relying less on Abuja to fund their consumption through monthly allocations.
They encouraged Osinbajo and the federal government to remain steadfast in the steps they had taken to reassure all communities and citizens of an equal stake in the Nigerian project, insisting that Nigerians need an effective state they call their own.

To reinforce the unity of the country, they appealed that on-going efforts to reach out to leaders from various parts of the country should be broadened into honest dialogue with all segments of the Nigerian population to ensure that ordinary citizens get the opportunity to convey their views to government at the highest levels and get carried along in the formulation and implementation of government policies.

The committee further advised the government to hold consultations on the possibility of examining the reports of the Political Reforms Conference of 2005 and other National Conferences as a basis for further and continuing dialogue on the co-existence among communities in Nigeria.
Pledging their support for the government to ensure effective enforcement of laws that prohibit divisive speeches, they called on politicians to deny support to or endorse groups that harbour or express disdain for peaceful coexistence among Nigerians.

Tuesday, December 22, 2015

NIGERIA: Senate Constitutes 38-Member Constitution Review Committee







The senate has begun a fresh process of amending the 1999 constitution with the inauguration of a 38-member review committee.
The committee comprises a senator from each of the 36 states and the Federal Capital Territory, FCT, with the Deputy Senate President, Ike Ekweremadu as chairman.
The review committee was named yesterday by Senate President, Bukola Saraki, shortly before the upper legislative chamber went into a joint session with the House of Representatives to receive President Muhammadu Buhari, who was at the National Assembly to lay the 2016 Appropriation Bill.
Ekweremadu also chaired the constitution amendment review committee of the seventh senate.
The product of the seventh amendment was not assented to by then President Goodluck Jonathan because of some objections, which were not reconciled properly before he left office on May 29.
Saraki, in a brief remark after announcing the new committee, said their work had been made easy because all they needed to do was to use the last review, which is still outstanding as a guide for the current exercise.
He warned the committee against embarking on any fresh tours in the course of the review since the last document was a product of wide consultations among Nigerians.
He said: “With the composition of the committee, the Senate had set the stage for the activities leading to the delivery to our people. The work already carried out by the Seventh Senate had made the jobs of the new committee easy.”

Wednesday, January 08, 2014

Igbo Leaders Demand Conference Of Ethnic Nationalities

Forget 2015, Nwabueze tells Jonathan

By Lawrence Njoku, The Guardian Nigeria

A group, Concerned Igbo Leaders of Thought led by constitutional lawyer, Prof Ben Nwabueze has written to President Goodluck Jonathan advising him not to convene the proposed national
conference using his inherent powers as enshrined in section 5 of the 1999 Constitution, as said to have been recommended by the Presidential Advisory Committee (PAC), warning that doing so would lead to anarchy.

  At a press conference, Nwabueze restated his earlier call on President Jonathan not to stand for re-election in 2015, stressing that he cannot combine the mobilization of election next year with the national conference.

 “I have advised him (Jonathan) to try and be a statesman, to be a hero and forget 2015. That the day you announce to Nigerians that you aare not going to stand for election in 2015, you become a great hero. You cannot combine these two thing–the mobilization for national conference which is aimed at national transformation and 2015 general elections. It is not possible. I have said it several times, I stated it when I led The Patriots to see him on August 29, 2013. I said it in Uyo, and I am saying it now”, Nwabueze stated.

 In a letter to the president dated January 6, 2014 and titled “ The position of the Igbo Nation on the National Conference, the renegotiated constitution of Nigeria”, the group insisted that President Jonathan should send an executive bill to the National Assembly authorizing the convocation of  an ethnic national conference whose outcome will be subjected to referendum, advising Nigerians to resort to protests should the National Assembly decline to authorize the conference.

   “The trouble here is that we Nigerians are docile, we finish here today, and everybody goes home, nothing happens. In other countries it does not happen. If the National Assembly refuses to pass the bill, the people should troop out to protest because these law makers are elected by the people and it is the people they should serve. The people say they are sovereign, but they are only sovereign by words of the mouth,” he said Reminded that such protests could lead to disintegration and probably affect the general election, Nwabueze said: “You do it to get a new system, you do it because we want a change. We cannot disintegrate, it will lead to desirable change. The general election is not a do-or-die matter, we can leave it for 2015. Many countries change the date for their election; we must get it right before we go to election.”

Nwabueze, who briefed reporters in Enugu on the essence of the letter by his group to the President, stated that it was borne out of the fact that the PAC empowered to ascertain the process of the conference had in their recommendations failed to meet the expectations of Nigerians.

 He added that such expressions were contained in a memorandum submitted to the President on August last year, when The Patriots which he leads visited the President where the idea of the national conference was mooted.

 Nwabueze said; “What the letter to the president is saying is that we wish to adopt a statement of the demand by The Patriots in the memorandum they submitted to you during a meeting with you on 29th August, 2013, particularly the elucidation of the fundamental attributes of the type of conference being demanded. These fundamental attributes are two: namely, a conference to adopt a suitable new constitution embodying renegotiated terms on which the diverse ethnic groups comprised in Nigeria can live together in peace, security, progress, general wellbeing and unity under one common central government, not a conference, the result of which deliberations will only be integrated in the existing 1999 Constitution.

“We don’t want that because the 1999 Constitution is a constitution only in a loose sense, it is not a constitution in the original sense of the act of the people, constituting the state and government. We are saying that this country has never had a constitution in the real sense, right from the colonial times, the constitution was made by the British not the people. The military came and made the constitution and in 1999, the military still made the constitution. We are saying that after all these years, the people of this country as a sovereign people should be given the opportunity to adopt a constitution for themselves and this is particularly important for the Igbo. We want the conference as an opportunity where we will sit with other ethnic groups to negotiate the terms and constitutions in which we will live together with others, the terms and constitutions to be embodied in a constitution.

“Secondly, conference of the ethnic nationalities making up the Nigerian state  should be the focal point, not a conference of individual Nigerians as autonomous entities or interest groups, although the latter should be given sizeable representation. We are demanding a conference of ethnic nationalities in this country. The people who wear the shoe know where it pinches. All the quarrels in this country are between ethnic groups claiming marginalization, some claiming injustice, some claiming suppression and the time has come for these ethnic groups, ethnic nationalities to come together. The autonomous individual Nigerians should not be excluded altogether, they should be given representation. We don’t want conference of interest groups or civil society groups and so on. We want a conference of ethnic nationalities. These are the two attributes of the conference we are demanding and these two attributes were amplified in a 30-paragraph memorandum submitted by The Patriots under my chairmanship to the President.

Nwabueze, Dr Dozie Ikedife, former President of Ohanaeze Ndigbo; Chief Anyim Ude (Ebonyi), Chief Enechi Onyia (Enugu) and two others signed the letter

Friday, November 08, 2013

Sovereign National Conference: A Symposium

THE AMBROSE EHIRIM FILES

A call for Sovereign National Conference had been echoed in all nooks and cranny of the nation's socio-cultural and political landscape to find out by way of dialogue how better the most populous nation in the continent with more than 250 ethnic groups could finally reach an agreement for proper governance. Many such cases of a national dialogue had been held in the past; and while some have been in favor of  sitting down and talk about it, some had argued it would make no difference to the ones previously held. On October 1, 2013, President Goodluck Jonathan, in his announcement to the nation, inaugurated the National Advisory Committee and gave them six weeks to submit a report of their findings and how possible a mandate could be obtained for related national discourses. As it had happened, I sought the opinion of Nigerians from all walks of life regarding their take on a sovereign national conference. In this first part of a symposium, eight contributors -- Dr. Femi Adebajo, Dr. E. John Agbomi, Pastor Harold Ikewueze, George C. E. Enyoazu, Ikhide R. Ikheloa, Nonso Franklin Anyanwu, Odimegwu Onwumere and Taohid Animaseun -- gave us a piece of their mind and what they thought should be done.


Excerpt:



A meeting of colonial administrators with tribal messengers in the early 20th century from the interior in Lagos, Nigeria. Image: Hulton-Deutsch Archives


The Nigerian Federal government has recently announced the inauguration of a committee to oversee arrangements for a national conference and despite the misgivings about the timing and the previous pronouncements of the principal functionaries of the government, this appears to be a positive response to the increasingly vociferous clamour for a renegotiation of our nationhood.

A brief historical excursion is necessary here. The existence of Nigeria as a nation can be dated to 1st January 1914 when the Governor, Frederick Lugard by means of a colonial legislative instrument, declared the amalgamation of the Northern and Southern protectorates. This administrative realignment, primarily to serve the economic interests of the colonial authorities, was accompanied by the first proper delineation of regional physical boundaries and subsequent constitutional arrangements merely reinforced the fait accompli of an involuntary union of over two hundred ethno-linguistic groups into one country. Many Nigerians argue that a union thus artificially conceived, sans a voluntary commitment of its constituent peoples, is an aberration and that the subsequent dysfunction and strife is an inevitable consequence of this abnormal conception. More recently, the obvious failures of the Nigerian state to protect and nurture its citizens and the aberrations of a lopsided federal arrangement have fuelled a widespread dissatisfaction with the status quo and strident calls for restructuring and separation.

The distinction between the abnormalities of structure and function of the modern Nigerian state must be noted in order to stress the realistic expectations from a Sovereign National Conference, as the beginning of the nation-building process rather than a nirvana of nationhood. Corrupt public officials, avaricious businessmen, inefficient public infrastructure, violent crime, moral anarchy etc can exist in whatever structural forms emerge from this process. The fundamental principle must be one of freedom of association and self-determination as inalienable human rights of individuals and groups. The SNC should thus be conceived as a two-stage process: firstly to answer the simple question of whether we wish to live together as one country and, secondly, under what formal arrangements do we wish to do so.

In my view, for far too long, the believers in a Nigerian nation have been variously timid and arrogant in discouraging these frank discussions about nationhood and in their misguided patriotic zeal, have deemed these legitimate questions either unpatriotic or seditious, even treasonous. This has ensured that the proponents of separation have dominated the landscape of intellectual discourse and the illogicalities of their position have not been robustly tackled. I hope that the recent change of heart by the FG marks the beginning of a true intellectual engagement with 'no-go areas' jettisoned and the power of persuasion, by logical argument, deployed rather than the coercive powers of state action. Just as important, those who see an SNC as a short cut to secession will find that their sincerity will be laid bare when they are invited to present their arguments.

On the issue of sovereignty and possible conflicts with the democratic mandate of the current legislative assemblies, various eminent legal authorities have pointed out that sovereign authority lies with the people and there is no contradiction in the expressed will of the Nigerian people, in the SNC context, being affirmed by the formal instruments of the current legislative assemblies. The democratic deficits of the various post-independence constitutions, mainly caused by the tinkering of the illegitimate military juntas that midwifed them, can thus be overcome.

The mode of representation in the SNC is also worthy of contemplation for it would be invidious to merely replicate a duplicate National Assembly by electing representatives from the current constituencies. It would be necessary to have true representatives of the people, selected by democratic means, but also representative elements of the various segments of our society- traditional rulers, labour unions, religious institutions, youth and student groups, professional associations, Diasporans etc. Such an assembly should be able to set its own agenda, invite and receive memoranda from all interested parties and devise the rules by which the aggregate of opinions will be derived, noting that a true democratic process ensures that the will of the majority prevails and the interests of minorities (all kinds) are protected.  A wholesome examination of issues such as the structure of the federating units, concurrent legislative lists, constituency delineation, land use laws, property rights, resource control and federal allocation formulas, indigeneship and residency rights, the interaction between state and religion, population census, policing arrangements, structure and function of the armed services and paramilitary organisations etc will inevitably result in a reworked constitution.

My own view is that separatist impulses are not uncommon in most modern societies, even in nations considered to be homogenous and settled, and arise from a  combination of fears (of domination and subjugation) and realities of marginalisation, historical animosities, disparities in expectation and cultural norms, as well as an all too human competition for resources. History teaches us that inequitable arrangements held together by force rather than free do not last and free humans usually choose to associate in large and economically advantageous groups if their interests can be thus promoted. Nigeria has both structural and functional deficiencies and an unfettered Sovereign National Conference can remedy the structural faults, start us on the road to repairing the functional defects and kick-start the process of welding 250+ ethnic nationalities into a single nation. 

Dr 'Femi Adebajo
Practicing Physician
Milton Keynes, England 



Humans as gregarious animals are imbued with the natural tendency to come together and function as a society, a community, a nation, sharing in the attributes of such conglomeration, freely without let, hindrance or coercion. They laugh together in times of joy, cry together in times of distress. These are the emotions that make us truly humans. A sovereign nation is born when, out of civilization, any such populations of human assemblage pledge loyalty and confide their trust to a governing body which they elect to oversee to their security, welfare and yes, to their happiness. The ensuing system of governance thrives and becomes sustainable by the wishes of the people whose interests it caters for. The referendum to govern therefore is attributable to the peoples’ wishes and not vice versa. As in the formation of a family – the core unit of any society - the mating spouses have to choose with whom to associate in order to become a loving couple; therefrom a harmonious, cohesive family union sprouts, festooned in love, respect and admiration. When myriads of such families, characterized by various subunits of society (designated as variant races, or diverse ethnicities), harmoniously interact, the resultant population enjoys peace, progress and unity, because they share in core cultural values innate and native to them; they are much more tolerant of imported ideologies which augur divisiveness. When attention is not paid to these factors, dissatisfaction, dissention and man-made calamities befall such shortsightedness and self-interest; the outcome is history … uncanny and disastrous, as innumerable, premature tombstones continue to cry: “Where is the love” unto the deaf ears of indifferent leadership.

Action they say, speaks louder than words; and no intellectual is a stranger to, nor could connive at, the ramifications of this assertion in the context of Nigeria and its often rancorous politics over the burgeoning years. Is Nigeria sick - too sick to undertake a candid self-diagnosis to establish its malaise infestation, and follow-up therapy, in order to proffer a prognosis of progress for future generations? Well, it would behoove its leadership to start taking a candid stock in itself by carrying out self-analysis in the light of what perceptions other developed world communities and well-meaning people think of it. How many Nigerians are truly and honestly happy at the status quo of Nigeria today? Not unless perhaps your “elbows are greased” by the ruling elites! Irrespective of any dogmas and arbitrary territorial limitations, all are born to be FREE – in pursuit of freedom of thought and of association, and to be HAPPY on Planet Earth, let alone the hereafter!

The geographic entity christened “Nigeria” a century ago next year 2014, by colonial masters, over half of which period it unremarkably self-governed itself, has unfortunately failed to address the core values and true wishes of its people, and rules by imposing government on its people with a by-product of disenfranchised, disgruntled elements that steam-off, venting their frustration at the expense of innocent citizens’ lives. Their system of electing custodians of their governing bodies is, for all practical purposes, artificial, relegating them to that often gut-retching, despicable designation of “third world” time and again, despite their salubrious natural resources and wealth - which nonetheless end up in the hands of a few! They cannot explain to the Nigerian public why, say for instance, 1 US dollar which was equivalent to 66 kobo in the seventies is now equivalent to N168 (naira) as of this write-up, yet Nigeria can still boast of foreign reserve in the billions? Mismanagement or what? The endless yet avoidable blood-baths that have plagued that entity since the wake of its self-governance have been a direct reflection of its astute leadership’s failure to pay attention to the actual wishes of the people who are supposed to be governed by them. Plausibly, their pattern of “democracy” could well be defined as “the government of the leaders, and by the leaders for the leaders and then for the people”!

If Nigeria must emerge to enjoy its enviable position in the continent of Africa, not just by numbers but by substantive value leadership and mental reawakening, it must device a new measure for assessing the true wishes of its people in terms of the type of association that each and every of its multimillion members wishes to get into, and seek to evoke the latent values imbued in each of those individuals; sparking a renaissance of some sort – a different kind of sovereignty.

A rudimentary plebiscite, a pooling of opinions and the generation of a referendum specifying the type of union or disunion that majority of its population seek, is a germane approach. Based on the outcome of such pooling, a governing committee representative of all the pooled ethnicities (devoid of incumbent legislators) could deliberate to decide on the fate of Nigeria in a direction that best suits PEACE, PROGRESS, UNITY and HAPPINESS as it enters its second century.

E. John Agbomi
Physician, songwriter and music producer
Moorpark, CA


One of my great uncles, a man who after my own biological father influenced my earliest worldview politically, Mr.Gabriel Ginikanwa Nwachukwu, a history graduate of the University of Ilorin once told me not too long ago that “they fearfully accepted to be called Nigerians”. His younger brother, Mr. Eustace Emeka Nwachukwu was an officer in the ‘People’s Army’ – the Biafran army. Dede Eguzoroibe as we love to call the younger Nwachukwu like my own dad who served as a recruit in the same army is a die-hard Biafran. My dad almost removed “Harold” from my names after what he saw as a   ‘taking of sides’ by the Harold Wilson’s led government of Great Britain during the Nigerian civil war. So one can easily discern what must have shaped my thinking about Nigeria while growing up. My father spoke a particular Ghanaian language fluently during his life time because he once lived in Ghana. He learns languages easily, but while living in Lagos for years, he deliberately refused to learn to speak Yoruba language because of his misgivings concerning the role that the Yorubas played before, during and after the civil war. In my brief stay with him in Lagos (1971-73) as a child, he made sure I had nothing to do with that language. Bottled up misgivings of a people who feel they are either not wanted in the enclave called Nigeria or that they are feared and loathed at the same time for no just cause.

With the scenario above, one will think I will wholeheartedly support the convocation of a sovereign national conference, hoping that it will be a clear cut roadmap to recovering what by 1970 looked like a shattered dream to those of us Nigerians of the Igbo race when war came to an end with the defeat of Biafra even though we pretended that there was “no victor, no vanquished”. My very good friend and brother, Barrister Leonard Ugboaja has been a great advocate of this conference, but we have cautiously disagreed on this, even though I congratulated him when recently President Goodluck Jonathan okayed a national confab. Yes, “jaw-jaw” according to inimitable late former British PM, Mr. Winston Churchill is better than “war-war”. But that is only when people talk sincerely and conscientiously. That is only when people talk open mindedly without secret tribal, ethnic and religious agendas as is often the case in Nigeria. I have often had reasons to seriously disagree with few famous newspaper columnists in Nigeria (I won’t mention names) on the kind of tribal sentiments that run through the entire gamut of their writings. And that is too sad for a country like Nigeria where even the intelligentsia is not free from the virus of tribalism. Nigeria is yet to grow up from her tribal childishness.  This tribal childishness is the abortion pill that will kill any good thing that will likely come out of a national conference. I wish we have come of nationalistic age to talk and talk like the aged and well informed. I wish, if at all we shall talk, we find a workable way to stop all those that have been talking before, whose vain talks have led us to nowhere.

But Aburi 1967 was a talk. It even went into an accord. But what happened later? One may argue it was a kind of an ad hoc peace-seeking talk like all the talks on troubled Syria of today.  But an agreement was reached at Aburi between the then Supreme military council of Nigeria led by the then youthful and naïve Gen.Gowon and the then Eastern region government of Nigeria led by the equally youthful but better learned in the guile and brinkmanship of politics, Col. Chukwuemeka Odimegwu Ojukwu. On return to Lagos after Aburi, the tribal lords and bespectacled bureaucrats in the Gen.Gowon’s government tore the accord to pieces with their counsel thereby inadvertently tearing Nigeria to pieces. They may have gloated over the Ahithophelian nature of their counsel but honestly there was nothing Ahitophelian in a breach of an agreement. Before we came to grips with the implications of that indiscretion we lost millions of our beloved fellow country men and women in a war which a more matured handling of the Aburi agreement could have stopped. We are a nation full of discordant tunes coming from all quarters. We are a nation known for our babble of voices whenever it is time to talk. And such babbles lead to nothing but more confusion. I personally do not want Nigeria to disintegrate. I do not accept the prophecy of false prophets especially from the Western world that Nigeria is bound to disintegrate by 2015. I smell rat in even Mr. President’s concession to a national conference at this time of all times.  He never believed in a national conference. How come he got ‘born again’ about the convocation of a national conference at a time that his purported 2015 presidential ambition is becoming an item too difficult to sell to majority of Nigerians outside his South-South and South-East regions? It may also be he has fallen to the bobby trap of these prophets of doom who expectedly will like to see to the fulfillment of their prophecy so as to give some grain of validity to their prophetic credentials.

    One is not too comfortable with the timing of the President GEJ National Confab. Less than two years to the 2015 general election. Is this not a cunningly devised instrument of talk-talk distraction, so that our wily and foxy politicians will go ahead to perfect their hideous plans for the 2015 election? Is this not the kind of IBB 1986 political bureau debate, one of the broadest political debates ever conducted in Nigeria? That 17 man bureau led by saintly Silvanus Cookey did their best, but did it not turn out to be the earliest manifestations of ‘Maradonic Politics’ in Nigeria? IBB politics in Nigeria taught Nigerian politicians more than elementary Marchivialism.  ‘Maradonism’ in politics is more than ancient Marchivialism.  Like the famous ‘hand-of-God’ - the very origin of Maradonism associated with the highly controversial goal scored by the legendary Argentine footballer, Diego Armanda Maradona against the English team in a 1986 FIFA world cup  football match played on June 22, 1986 at the Estadio Azteca, Mexico city; before you see the scorer, it is goal already. I do pray that the current national conference is not another delay tactics now that clauses are being added day by day, like that the submissions of the conference will be vetted by the national assembly. If we must talk, let the choice of the representatives be purely based on merit and not on political patronage as usual. Had it been that we have been sincere with our ongoing political experiment, with the political 

Harold Ikewueze, Pastor
General Secretary, Students Christian Movement
 Abuja, Nigeria

For over a decade, calls for a Sovereign National Conference (SNC) had reached a deafening crescendo in Nigeria. Proponents of the conference saw it as an avenue to find and address the key problems afflicting Nigeria since 1914 to present.  The ace constitutional-lawyer, Gani Fawehinmi of blessed memory put it succinctly in the year 2000:

 “...The concern is to remove all obstacles which have prevented the country from establishing political justice, economic justice, social justice, cultural justice, religious justice and to construct a new constitutional frame-work in terms of the system of government-structurally, politically, economically, socially, culturally and religiously.”

The above description vividly captures the salient aspects of injustices that have manifested in various ramifications, and seem to have been moulded into the prevalent culture of hate, intolerance, acrimony, ethnocentrism, blood-letting, restiveness, pogroms, south-north dichotomy, west-east divide, deprivation, underdevelopment, infrastructural decay, lack of basic amenities, unemployment, poverty, corruption, criminality, insecurity and state failure. One of the major issues is the lack of will by the ruling class to get things done, and rightly. Whenever a national crisis arises, those at the helm of affairs treat it with infidelity. That seems to be an established pattern.

Here we are, talking about SNC. The Aburi Conference of 1967 provided an opportunity for representatives of shades of Nigerian governments to discuss and avert imminent greater crises which were to follow. But the squandering of the Aburi Accord by the Yakubu Gowon-led Military junta spelt disaster for the fledgling independent former British colony peaked by the Biafran War of attrition which claimed the lives of 3.5 million Biafrans.  Aburi was a promise not kept. The aftermath of the failure to take advantage of it is why Nigeria is still wandering in the dark, nearly five decades on.

Let the truth be told. Nigerians are yet to be fervent in self-appraisal. Some of the scars and repulsive misdeeds of the Nigerian forces are staring us in the face, but they are vainly wished away. Sadistic orgies, such as the Massacres which they had perpetrated on hapless civilians in: 1967 Asaba Massacres and Onitsha Massacre in 1968 won’t go away, until people acknowledge the wrongfulness of such acts with unreserved apologies. No student who fails their exams can scale through repeating the same mistakes. Military forces follow orders...whose orders? – The man behind the mask?

The eventual triumph of the Nigerian federal forces gave the impression of an end to all forms of self-determination agitations in the new Nigeria, which has been unified by the conquest of Biafra. Perhaps, the non-implementation of the country’s three Rs programme – Rehabilitation, Reconciliation, and Reconstruction by the very same architects of the programme was the beginning of the loss of the peace. The three Rs meant to reintegrate the former Biafran territories into the socio-political life of Nigeria were substituted with covert and overt marginalization policies of the war-battered region. This singular act of reneging by the Nigerian government indeed relived the reneging of the regime from the Aburi Accord, an accord which, if implemented would have staved off the war and its consequences. And it is perceived that the Nigerian Military government was unrepentant for its inglorious role in Biafra, and unwilling to extend a lifeline to the survivors in the beleaguered territory. Thus, the proclamation of the three Rs merely served as an image-making stunt, an attempt by the regime to paint a picture of benevolence towards the one-time enemy territory which bore the brunt of war. The world was once again duped into believing that all was well. The three Rs programme was another promise not kept.

Religion has always been used as a political and ethnic tool in Nigeria to unleash mayhem on people of different ideologies, different ethnic groups, and different religious beliefs. It’s been used to pursue an extremist agenda, seek to domineer and exert political control, continue an expansionist policy, and hinder the forward movement of the country in civility. A lot of the attacks principally target a certain ethnic group. Historically, the Igbo are the most targeted and worst hit. It all started with Jos riots of 1945, in which Igbo people were attacked. Again in 1953, “anti-Ibo riots broke out in the north in protest of Ibo domination of social, political, business and military institutions. Ibos were hunted down and attacked in Kano, 245 were injured and more than 52 were killed. The southern Yoruba did not participate in the fighting.” [Ref World].

The Maitatsine religious onslaught took Northern Nigeria by storm in the best part of the 1980s. The so-called riots are never dealt with to forestall recurrence, hence the incessancy. Perpetrators of these bloody riots are never punished. In its January 21, 2010 editorial “Not Just Jos”, Vanguard writes:

“Any attempt to bring the perpetrators of the riots to book starts another riot. The November 2008 riot is the subject of two probes, the Justice Bola Ajibola panel by the Plateau State Government, which has finished its work and the on going General Emmanuel Abisoye panel of the Federal Government.

Riots date a little bit further and in the North appear to be used in furthering religious hegemony. They have been extended to political disputes and in some instances poorly managed ethnic relations. Some major riots – riots Jos in 1945, Kano in 1957, most parts of northern Nigeria in 1966, Kano in 1980, Maiduguri in 1982, Jimeta in 1984, Gombe in 1985, Kaduna and Kafanchan in 1991, Bauchi, Katsina, and Kano in 1991, Zango-Kataf in 1992, Funtua in 1993, Kano in 1994 and 2000, Kaduna Sharia riot 2001, Jos 2004, Kano 2004 and Kano 2007, Maiduguri, Bauchi, Yobe and Kano in 2009. The losses have been estimated at over 100,000 and property worth billions of Naira.
More than 6,000 people perished in the December 1980 Maitatsine in Kano, which spread to Yola, Maiduguri, Bauchi and Gombe. Maitatsine sects have been regrouping under different names since then, wrecking havoc wherever they go.

Rioters target churches under the cloak of religious differences. When Muslim sects disagree, they burn churches, and attack non-Muslims. Riots are more political than religious.

Estimates of deaths from riots in Jos and other towns in Plateau State since 2001 are in the 4,000 mark.” [Vanguard]

Needless to assert that since 2002, another Islamic militant group known as Boko Haram has stepped into the fray, having a similar ideology as Maitatsine, continuing the onslaught – bombing, killing, destroying, maiming and uprooting people from their chosen places of residency. Apart from recruiting locals, Boko Haram is said to have enlisted the help of Muslim fighters from neighbouring Chad. The inability of the federal government to protect its people and guarantee them the modest benefits accruable to citizenship is a promise not kept. Of course, if citizens feel threatened, unprotected and failed by their State, they reserve the right to self-determination. There’s no point being a denizen in your own country!

Bizarrely, some ethnic groups in Nigeria had supported the wrong cause, thinking that the weakness of one would be their own gain. So far, they have been proven wrong. By this miscalculation, they played into an agenda which created hegemony and reduced the polity to naught. In spite of disloyalty to their Igbo kith and kin and sabotaging of the Biafran revolution, the Eastern minorities were treated as a conquered territory alongside their Igbo neighbours. They were made to suffer the same deprivation as the Igbo. To their chagrin, it was a Nigerian promise not to be fulfilled. In place of promise, they were rewarded with abject poverty, environmental degradation occasioned by oil spillage, underdevelopment, loss of means of livelihood, and so forth. This ugly situation gave rise to indigenous people’s agitations for resource control and environmental protection. In response, the government met their demands with high-handedness and military suppression yielding the likes of Umuechem Massacre in 1990, 1995 Execution of the Ogoni 9, and Odi Massacre in 1999. All these culminated into youth restiveness, the militancy and militarisation of the Niger Delta, sabotage of oil pipelines, advent of kidnapping for ransom and other criminalities. All these have resulted in a sense of disillusionment in the region which lent urgency to some forms of discussion and restructuring.

Zaki Ibiam massacre of 2001 in the Middle Belt deserves a mention as one of those incidents which occurred when people trusted the word of their government without realizing it was an ambush.

After the fall of the apartheid regime, South Africa’s legitimate government set up the Truth and Reconciliation Commission (TRC) lasting from 1995 to 2002. The TRC was to underscore the wrongs and victims of the obnoxious apartheid era on both divides and to effect a healing. South Africa’s TRC was the 19th of such held across the world; with the slight difference that the Cape Town based South Africa’s TRC was the first one to conduct public hearings. Despite some flaws, the exercise was held as a success.

Borrowing from South Africa, Nigeria, under Olusegun Obasanjo set up the Human Rights Violations Investigation Commission, 1999.

“The Commission was mandated to identify the perpetrators of human rights violations and to recommend accountability measures and means of preventing future abuses. The original mandate asked the Commission to gather information about four military regimes that ruled Nigeria from 1984 to 1999. However, the temporal scope of the Commission was later extended back to 1966; the year of Nigeria's first military coup after the country had gained independence from the United Kingdom.” -Harvard University.

According to the United States Institute for Peace, the commission submitted its report to Obasanjo in June 2002, but the report was never released officially to the public. However, a Washington-based NGO known as Nigerian Democratic Movement and Nigeria-based Civil Society Forum acted on their own accord to publish the full report to the public. The report found amongst other things, the military responsible for gross human rights violations, in collaboration with some rich civilians. One of the recommendations was a compensation for victims of human rights abuses. As usual, the Nigerian government never blinked. Neither the military nor the culpable rich civilians were censured by the government. No apologies were rendered to victims and descendants of human rights abuses, and no compensations paid. Instead, Obasanjo sent the army again on murderous rampage in Odi and Zaki Ibiam. Very typical!

Now, with the acceptance by the President, Goodluck Ebele Jonathan that a Sovereign National Conference is a road map to a fresh start, one wonders if his government would be prepared to break the jinx of dishonesty and lack of faith which those who had mimed leadership roles in Nigeria were known for. Nigeria is still plagued by a post-war winner dementia propounded by those who tricked their way into power by pretending to love Nigeria and fighting for her unity, and have sustained misrule to date, by rewarding their conspiracy since 1966. It beats logic that a bunch of self-acclaimed patriots would fight for the love of a country and end up feasting on its misery. As we can see, Nigeria is remotely and directly ruled by the War victors whose vested interest has created so much mess that needs thorough cleaning up.

Interestingly, the colonial Governor-General of Nigeria between 1920–31, Sir Hugh Clifford, described Nigeria as “a collection of independent Native States, separated from one another by great distances, by differences of history and traditions and by ethnological, racial, tribal, political, social and religious barriers.”  (Nigeria Council Debate, Lagos, 1920). [Open Mind Foundation].

All over the world, self-determination is the prerogative of every people, and their will is respected. Nigeria’s Sovereign National Conference must not be programmed, pre-empted, and delegates must not be selected by the government. Every possibility must be on the table. Passionate groups should be allowed to participate in the conference. There must not be a no-go area; else it’s no longer sovereign. Sahara Reporters reported about an individual, Dr Femi Okurounmu, a former senator who while speaking on behalf of the federal government had ruled out discussing the break-up of Nigeria during the conference. His reason hinged on:

“Those people who believe in the dismembering of Nigeria are just fringe groups,” he said, referring to some elements in the Movement for the Actualization of the Sovereign State of Biafra (MASSOB), the Odua People’s Congress (OPC), Arewa People’s Congress (APC), Movement for the Survival of Ogoni People (MOSOP) and other groups. “Nobody came to demand that Nigeria should be dismembered,” he said. “The goal of the National Conference is greater justice and greater equity.” – Sahara Reporters

If that line of thought is the basis for the conference, it means that the outcome of the conference has already been decided before the conference kicks off, thereby sealing its fate as another futile exercise in the league of successive Nigerian governments’ window dressing. It becomes like Obasanjo-era elections where the outcomes were determined, and candidates assumed the positions they were vying for before even the votes were cast. In a country where numerous organized groups as Okurounmu highlighted are asking for self-determination in form of separation, it raises curiosity as to why he thought that those groups are fringe, especially being that the groups command large followings in their respective regions in Nigeria. How do you determine what is fringe? Is it not by testing its popularity, either via referendum or plebiscite? Why would they be so afraid of the so-called fringe groups to the extent of denying them a say in determining their own future? How fringe are the fringe groups? The smartest approach would be to allow each group a say, and when their region and people eventually reject their stand through a referendum, that would by implication strengthen One-Nigeria. This is the only way to give either a legal backing or rejection to Lord Frederick Lugard’s 1914 adventure in the Niger area.


Nigeria has become synonymous with a promise not kept. President Jonathan should distance himself from the hypocrisy of his authoritarian predecessors, and their foot soldiers. He was given a strong mandate by the people to lead. At this crucial point in history, he has to trust that the same people whose mandate he has are itching for their voice to be heard, not the voice of the clique. Failure to make a wise judgment would reduce the SNC to another jamboree, a waste of resources and a waste of precious time. That’s sure to worsen the state of the nation.

George C.E. Enyoazu
Geochiez & Gold International
Dundalk, Ireland


On October 1, 2013, President Goodluck Ebele Jonathan announced the approval of a national conference and subsequently set up a committee to study the modalities for the conference and come up with recommendations on how to go about the conference. The members of the advisory committee are Dr. Femi Okurounmu (chairman), Dr. Akilu Indabawa (secretary), Professor George Obiozo, Professor. Ben Nwabueze (now replaced by Professor Anya O. Anya on health grounds) Senator Khairat Gwadabe, Senator Timothy Aduda, retired Colonel. Tony Nyiam, Professor. Funke Adebayo, Mrs. Mairo Ahmed Amshi, Dr. Abubakar Sadiq, Alhaji Dauda Birma, Mallam Buhari Bello and Mr. Tony Uranta. There are brief bios of many of the members here. It is a typical Nigerian “committee.” Long on gerontocracy and patriarchy, three women make up the panel and I imagine the president is taking the title “Chairman” literally;  chairman must be a man. Where are the students? Where are the young? Why do we need to convene a conference? What is the purpose of the National Assembly? What do they do? Why can’t they have this conference?

Of course, Nigerians were caught by surprise, and the ensuing racket from every corner of Nigeria gave voice to the sense that rather than this being a substantive and proactive confrontation of Nigeria’s myriad structural, social, cultural and economic issues, instead the populace seemed largely convinced that this is yet another game as Nigeria’s leaders supervise the lurching of the country from one crisis to the other.

Yes, there is a new game in town, if you obsess nonstop about the fate of that mercurial, nebulous, frustrating entity called Nigeria. It is called the National Conference, not to be confused with that other seething-in-the-shadows game called Sovereign National Conference. The Sovereign National Conference as you know is similar to the term reparations, many people seem to want it, but there is no one alive that can explain it coherently. And so people nod sagely, make a lot of polite noises, safe in the knowledge that it will never go anywhere. Those who want reparations for Black folks desire the asymptote from hell. It won’t happen. The Sovereign National Conference, and now, the National Conference will not happen, because no one knows what it means, except that it involves money, revenue allocation, decentralization of power (and money) to more contiguous states of like tribes, to be crass. It won’t happen, and President Goodluck Ebele Jonathan knows this. He just wants to keep greedy Nigerian intellectuals and an ever hopeful ruling elite busy.

And there has been a surplus of analysis, commentary and opinion. You read and the head reels from the logorrhea of verbose and overly scholarly theories about the ideal state(s). It is all so sad.  Nigeria cannot afford this latest distraction, on many levels. My mother has zero interest in a national conference or conversation; she would like some basic things, like pipe-borne water and electricity, safety and security.  If I was to tell her about this latest distraction, she would look at me askance, flustered by what the problem  we are now trying to solve is.  She would tell me in a conspiratorial whisper, “My son, I suspect that our thieves in high places want their own country!” My mother has a good point: How is it that these leaders who have basically looted everything that is not welded down, “leaders” who now own everything good in Nigeria can with bold faces assure us that the next Nirvana will come out of a National Conference or something  equally silly? Why is a national conference our priority right now? The answer lies in what Wole Soyinka would say: "We asked for statesmen and we were sent executioners.” Our rulers are now executioners, gleefully feeding us distraction after distraction while they grin all the way to the banks of Europe and America.

It is all about priorities. Here we are, the Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) has been on strike for months, leaving university students to their own devices at home or wherever suits their fancy, other unions threaten daily to join them and all we get from the government (and by the way, the populace) are polite noises and long yawns. Nigeria is not a serious country. We have a real crisis on our hands, it is called Nigeria and our intellectuals and "rulers" are prattling on about a national conference. Every day we are confronted with evidence of profligate spending and blatant looting from the local to the national level, from the lowliest clerk to the highest offices of the land, and our priority is a national conference. It makes no sense. How can these criminals and conmen now start telling us that once we each get our own country, the looting will stop? What is wrong with us? As an aside, the constitution of the advisory group, with its lack of inclusiveness loudly advertises the sense that Aso Rock is not really interested in a substantive dialogue; they are mostly the deities of gerontocracy with visions and strategies that belong in the 19th century.   Mr. Jonathan is attempting to lead us through the gift of drunken gab. Otherwise how do you manage a country without data? Where did our rulers learn that we want a national conference? Where? Did they do a survey? Did they subject it to the ballot box? No, some drunks were drinking peppersoup and someone blurted out, “National Conference!”  Et voila, the people have spoken!

The real tragedy of Nigeria’s circumstances is that there is a compelling case that could be made for a national conference. As Nigeria has lurched from regime to democracy, from one structure to the other, the mindset of a top down heavily centralized and overly dysfunctional government has remained the one frustrating constant. A structure that truly devolves power to states or regions, one that grants true autonomy to these satellite entities makes great sense. But then, the words of the sage, Chinua Achebe rage across this vision: 

The trouble with Nigeria is simply and squarely a  failure of leadership. There is nothing basically wrong with the Nigerian character. There is nothing wrong with the Nigerian land or climate of water or air or anything else. The Nigerian problem is the unwillingness or inability of its leaders to rise to the responsibility, to the challenge of personal example which are the hallmarks of true leadership.”

Achebe is right, there is no structure robust enough to withstand the subversion of a failed leadership. Wait, I have another vision:  Maybe we should have a National conference so that our thieves can have their own country and leave us alone.  

Ikhide R. Ikheloa
Educator, Maryland, USA


Over the last three months, Nigeria has been a big-mad-house, following the series of controversies that has lingered till this time. The strike action by the Academic Staff Union of Universities, followed by the breaking-up of the ruling party, and currently, the call for a National Conference. Although many Nigerians has expressed their views concerning this. They said this isn't the right time to talk about National Conference. They said electricity and welfare are the most vital issue to address, and not the National Conference. They said how will the president talk about a National Conference when sixty-three Universities and over one hundred polytechnics are under locks. They said how can the president talk about a National Conference with the increasing insurgence in the North, the constant negative news of bombing and shooting and lynching.

If truth be told, the president is inexperience to handle national matters. He had fallen out of favour with his godfathers (the founding members of the ruling parties, PDP). He had fallen out of favour the Nigerian Youths, Students, Doctors. He's a lamb among wolves in a corrugated bars of wealth. Confused. Following the controversies surrounding his 'promise' not to recontest. His chances of coming back as president is very very slim. Amidst this controversies, my friend had told me some weeks back, that the only option left for the president is to divide the nation, knowing that he can't come back as president. We only laughed ourselves into tears over this.

The call for National Conference. There are talks that the president had been pushed to the wall by some overzealous Igbos who desperately want the nation to split so they can resurate the death of The Republic of Biafra. But the president had dispelled those rumors, saying that the National Conference is a way of bringing the nation together. Now, I ask, how can he bring the nation together when over five million students, doctors and lectures are idling away at home. He should dialogue with this people into calling off their over one hundred days of idleness.

If truth be told, Nigeria is a very big-mad-house where human lives are been deleted in every thick of the clock. Nigerians are not united. Let's not hide under the umbrella of religion, asking God to unite us. We can NEVER be united. This hatred had started way back before the nation's independence, proceeding to Civil War, and now to incessant killing of the Igbos or the Christians in the North. I think the National Dialogue will create a room for asking this very hard questions: is Nigeria a nation or a Nation-state or just a mere geographical expression, or a Nation void of sovereignty. I added Sovereign because I haven't seen any sovereign nation where some citizens had come out in the press to threaten its existence.

Nonso Franklyn Anyanwu,
English Literature Major,
Ahmadu Bello University
Zaria, Kaduna State


Many Nigerians have thanked President Goodluck Jonathan after October 1st he agreed that Nigerians have to talk in a conference, otherwise called National Conference, and dialogue on ways to move the country forward. Others have as well, reviled him, for agreeing for the conference.

The Federal Government had hence set up an advisory committee and gave it modules to follow. Senator Femi Okurounmu was to head the committee and Dr. Akilu Indabawa, as the Secretary of the committee.

In a countrywide comment, while marking 53rd Independence anniversary of Nigeria, Mr. President’s appointed committee, according to him, would propose a framework and recommend the form, structure and mechanism of the conference.

It, however, behooves the people not allow the President steal their sovereignty in the conference, because the people are supposed to decide how and what they want at the conference, and not to discuss what the presidency wants to be discussed, with dictates of the modalities of the advisory committee.

It’s good that Jonathan had said: Our politics should be an art of patriotic labour and selfless service to the community, particularly by the political elite who are placed in positions of great trust and responsibility. Politics has its own high moral principles which abhor distracting and divisive rhetoric.

Therefore, it cannot be taken as certainty, the comment by an opposition political party in Nigeria, that it would not take part in the proposed conference, because it sees dialogue as the constitutional amendment process. It had agreed that such was already ongoing.

Conversely, the party purportedly said that this kind of Jonathan’s proposed dialogue can never be taken as the sovereign type, where stakeholders and opinion leaders in the country have to sit together, to iron out their woes; instead, a few of their disgruntled agents in the National Assembly are already doing the work?

Notwithstanding, Nigerians have to have the depth of the formation of the country called Nigeria today, before entering into any dialogue. The negotiation has to be that power has to come to the people and the centre, which controls even the issuance of driver’s license, is weakened. And the existing political zones instituted in favour of the country’s politics have to be decentralised for the formation regional government that would oversee people-oriented ideologies come to play.

With the devolution of the old eastern region and the politics of state creation, where the South-East has five state as against the six states or more that other political states enjoy, is one of the undoing of the Nigerian Government in its divide and rule way of dealing with any tribes in the country.

The country might not have had a transparent conference in the past, but it is obvious that the government has been having conferences against Ndigbo, as the political equation above suggested, without the government addressing justice in the country as they relate to economic, social, political and the most important ones – cultural and religious justices.

In earnest, the people are supposed to construct a new constitutional frame-work in the country, but the government at the centre creates policies that make people thrive in its caprices and whims, and not in the growth of the individuals. To buttress this point, the government proud that its reserved account is fat, when the individuals are very poor; what is the cause of this is that the government has not allowed the people the willpower to develop, but, rather, to follow the government at its dictates.

It is not a good idea that the government continues to export raw materials abroad, when it could have refined it in the country to create job opportunities for the citizens and regain their sovereign. Professor Ebere Onwudiwe, a political scientist and economist, who has taught at various universities in the USA., in an interview with Vincent Kalu, Saturday Sun, Sep. 7, 2013, said inter alia: “We have the best grade crude oil for refining in the world, the Bonny Light, which is so easily refined that many countries buy it to help refine their own bad crude that is very hard to refine.

“They buy large quantities of Bonny Light to help refine their own oil and we turn around to import these refined products, thereby creating jobs for people in other countries... We produce raw material as in the colonial days and we are largely doing that after 50yrs of independence. How can we be producing the most easily refined crude in the world and be importing petrol, diesel, kerosene without an iota of shame. If the world isn't laughing at us they are stupid...”

We can see that the Federal Government continues to boast of being rich, whereas frustration it creates among Nigerians in terms of poverty, absence of consolidated human development and co are alarming, with shock of corruption that has become the trademark of those that run the government.

In the absence of sovereignty to the people by the Federal Government, the peoples of the country enjoy tribalism, which was the result-effect of disuniting people in their regions and creating of states; like Rivers State was created out of the old Eastern region in 1967, just to weaken the sovereignty of Biafrans, who took up arms to defend their lives, from being extirpated from the surface of the earth, by the rapacious military government of Yakubu Gowon.

There is no how the peoples of Nigeria can rebuild the foundation again, when the Federal Government is the one playing the ostrich, destroying love, integrity and respect for one another, with lucre of power and chicaneries to projects. The peoples will never enjoy Nigeria, because the government is not reliable with sacrificial leadership. Perhaps, these are happening in the country, because of what the Governor General of Nigeria between 1920 – 31 , Sir Hugh Clifford, described Nigeria as.

Clifford said that Nigeria is “a collection of independent Native States, separated from one another by great distances, by differences of history and traditions and by ethnological, racial, tribal, political, social and religious barriers.”  (Nigeria Council Debate.  Lagos, 1920). This description, perhaps, again, compelled (then) Lt. Col. Gowon on November 30, 1966 to fire an Ad Hoc Constitutional Conference.

It is very imperative that the different peoples of the country are given their sovereignty while Nigeria remains one, because before the amalgamation of the country in 1914 by the cheap-wealth-seeking European colonialists, the people in this amalgam were controlling their different fates in their different kingdoms.

But since these ethnic combinations, the government has been self-centered, bigoted and troublesome to the fate of the collective Nigeria. To make this point home, the now late Dr Ramsome-Kuti, as the former Director of the Centre for Constitutional Governance, substantiated this fact, according to a file by a group regarded as Niger Delta Congress.

The human rights activist, Dr. Ramsome-Kuti, said: “Long before 1914, when Nigeria was amalgamated, the present space was not a void. People, empires and modes of production existed.

“The far North was ruled by Hausa Habes, which was the home of many tribes, Hausa Magajiya, Abyssinian or of coptic stock. From 900 to 1500 AD. The Hausaland was besieged by political forces from Bornu, the Berbes, Tuyaregs and Arabs. The most formidable was the 1804 Jihad which swept the Habeland, imposed an oligarchy, seized the people and the land until the advent of British rule.

“The Yorubaland had the Oyo empire, which triumphed until about 200 years ago, we also have the Bachama, Birom, Angas, Tiv, Kaje, Nupe, Ijaw, Igbo and numerous others. The merging of the Southern and Northern protectorates in 1914 was accidental so also was the name, Nigeria given to its people.

“It is important to say that British rule was not forged on negotiations with Nigerians, but negotiations with ethnic nationalities. So also there was no “Nigerian position,” but ethnic nationality positions.

“The 1960 independence, to our knowledge, was preceded by a curious finding conducted by Henry Willink supported by Gordon Hardow, Philip Mason, and JB Shearer, which compiled a report on July 30 1958, now known as the Willink Commission of Enquiry...”

Now, those concerned have to read cautiously the diverse positions of nationalities at the conference to enable an emancipation of their sovereigns. To get it right at the conference, the government must allow the notion that Nigeria has never been a country of a people with one ideology, culture and tradition.

And this is why the Federal Government is using the two alien religions – Islam and Christianity – as tools to subject Nigerians to its administrative convenience, but to the detriment of the different peoples.

The Federal Government polarised these unfamiliar religions in two zones – Islam for the north and, Christianity for the South, as a way to unite the peoples. But upon all that, the cultural, religious, social, and linguistic differences of the tribes continue to show that the peoples need their sovereign ideologies to sooth their vitality as tribes.

To get this conference right, the Federal Government must eschew deceitfulness, fraud, egocentricity and self-centeredness, so that the many grievances and accusations on each other in Nigeria, would be expelled into annihilation. 

Odimegwu Onwumere
Poet/Writer
Port Harcourt, Rivers State



Sovereign national conference, as the name implies, is the convening of recognized entities in a nation to address socio-economic issues for nation building purposes. The sovereign qualification carries serious and huge legal weight implication as such meeting carries with the ability to change the course of such nation from the existing path. For a sovereign nation like Nigeria, calling for a sovereign national conference seems absurd but not illegal, especially if it originated from the legislature. One of the greatest legal underlinings of SNC is the option of member entities to seek self-determination which is a double-edged sword that could slash at either side by way of secession or continued association.

 A series of meetings between member entities of old Sudan paved way to the split of the nation into two via self-determination provision which is embedded in sovereignty. Same with Eritrea that parted way with old Ethiopia. Pakistan did with old India. Chief Gani Fawehinmi, in 2000, opines that “the primary duty of the sovereign national conference is to address and find solutions to the key problems afflicting Nigeria since 1914 to date.” Further, he says “the concern is to remove all obstacles which have prevented the country from establishing political justice, economic justice, social justice, cultural justice, religious justice and to construct a new constitutional frame-work in terms of the system of government – structurally, politically, economically, socially, culturally and religiously.” In essence, SNC attempts to arrive at for acceptable or agreed terms of relationship between cohabiting entities amongst each other within the common territory that they all shared for mutual and peaceful survival. An absence of agreed and acceptable terms of association spells doom for such society.

Sovereign national conference (SNC) is perhaps the most vital channel to nation building, especially for nations with broad multiculturalism like us still struggling to stand on its feet. It could be continuous periodical session i.e. elected legislatures. Or it could be designated conference. The common denominator is that when initiated, both carries with it strong legal implication. Of recent, Nigeria had one – designated - under the military regime that produced the 1999 constitution. This paved way for the existing democratic system of government that Nigerians enjoy today. It ended the military expedition in the public governance. That shows the weight of SNC. Unless there is probable cause to reconvene a designated SNC, it is usually a one-and-done adventure. However, it is pertinent to state that the continuous form – such as National Assembly (NASS) - will infinitely continue to convene as long as the democratic system of government is practiced.

Discussing SNC, based on Nigeria’s existing socio-economic status, one would be compelled to see SNC as a no-brainer. Nigeria still lacks a functioning national system despite the human and natural resources it is bestowed with. There are two distinct economic classes in Nigeria: the upper class, and the lower class. The middle class is of no significant size. It is extinct. Of the three recognized layers of government, the center – FG – holds voluminous powers. It is so massive that it controls virtually everything in the nation. Without the FG, several states will collapse in a week. In terms of political participation, some notable regions, ethnics, certain demographics, etc. claim marginalization of one sort or the other. Couple with this is the security breakdown fuelled by nascent internal crises by rebels and freedom fighters. One interest group vouched to make the country ungovernable for the sitting president. The whole system is down. It is fast-revealing that this is mere cosmetic cohesion. The questions from citizens’ mouths are ‘when will it get better, and how?’ The vast human and natural resources abound, but it does not translates to national development. There was leadership vacuum. Politicians abound yet no end in sight to the despicable conditions.

The current administration headed by President Goodluck Johnathan formed recently a committee to draw up a modality on national conference. It gave the committee a blank check on matters to be discussed at the conference. At this time, there is no sovereign qualification to it. However, no issue is above discussion. Potential questions are: what if sovereignty of the entities come up at the conference for discussion? How would the recommendations of this conference be implemented from the legal point of view? If legal grounds are attached to it, will the current administration honor them? Isn’t this a political suicide for the sitting president should the conference be concluded before 2015 election? All these and numerous others are still vague to the masses. Some citizens saw this as a political ploy to distract citizens from current burning issues. Others see this as part of the long-abhorred South-East and/or South-South agenda. Or even that it is the hand writing on the wall for the predicted split of the country on or before 2015. It is too early to judge, but these issues deserve surgical dissection before they hit us in the face. 

The idea of a national conference or dialogue is not bad in its right. It is the timing that becomes suspect. So is its historical trend as well as the existing variables. At press time, the country is in bad shape, both politically, and economically. The unemployment level is astronomical. Healthcare system is absurd. Thousands and thousands are dying of lack of family supports. To them, the Nigeria dream is dead. It is either you are rich or you are poor. The middle class is extinct. For the working class, it is get rich or die trying. A more robust and cursory examination of this poor condition would reveal that the nation is in a coma. Citizens, regions, ethnics, tribes, nations, zones and any applicable classifications in the enclave are hungry for power to survive.


However, would it be applicable to go on rounds of debates on ‘when, how, what, where, who’ with an individual plagued with terminal chronic hunger? A rational approach would have been to resuscitate the dying corpse first. Then he would have strength and patience to understand the complexities of his problems.  An adage says: a hungry man is an angry man. Another, in Yoruba land, says nothing has priority over hunger. It is deathly. Nigerians are hunger for quality standard of living. It was not because of national conference that basic amenities were, and still lacking. At 53 years, Nigeria, despite all the massive resources and brains, is still struggling with 20th century innovations. A simple national unique identifier does not exists yet it wants to fight terrorism, and allocate its resources efficiently. How? In Nigeria with ‘citizens’ holding duplicate passports? It would be rather beneficial to ensure that an atmosphere where certain efficient infrastructures are in place first before such conference, be it sovereign or conventional, is embarked on. Then we can sit at the round table with no fear of suspect of each other on grounds of hunger for power as power will become a common commodity soon afterwards. The absence of sociopolitical hunger dictates a society foundationed on conducive atmosphere for such deliberations and discussions. Then, politics will be less lucrative scheme for upward economic mobility. God bless Nigeria.

Taohid Animashawn
Student

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